The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Doctor: Pledge may have lived if help was called sooner

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A forensic pathologis­t testified Friday that injuries that killed a Penn State fraternity pledge last year might not have been fatal if fraternity members had summoned help more quickly.

Dr. Harry Kamerow took the stand in a preliminar­y hearing to determine if there is sufficient evidence to proceed with charges against 11 members of Beta Theta Pi in the death of Tim Piazza of Lebanon, New Jersey.

Piazza, 19, died of severe head and spleen and abdominal injuries from falling down basement stairs the night of a pledge bid acceptance ceremony, Kamerow said, adding that Piazza had also consumed a dangerous amount of alcohol, three or four times the legal limit for driving.

He said Piazza would have had a much better chance of surviving had help been called after he was brought upstairs. Instead, fraternity members were shown on camera taking half-hearted and even counterpro­ductive steps to address his condition, and an ambulance was not called until the next morning.

“He has a much better shot at survival, if they brought him out of the basement, recognized what’s going on,” and called an ambulance, Kamerow testified. “If he’s very close to that period, he’s got a good shot. As time passes on, his prognosis grows dimmer and dimmer and dimmer.”

The defendants, among 26 young men accused of crimes related to Piazza’s death, were not in court for the preliminar­y hearing.

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